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Balancing risk and rewards in filing motions for summary judgment.

SECOND TOPIC:

Planning discovery to support a motion for summary judgment, including from third-parties.

SUGGESTED QUESTIONS

1. What are some of the procedural issues that we should be concerned about in preparing summary judgment motions?

Answer: The first place to start is the statute itself, so reading the actual text of FRCP 56 before preparing the motion would be helpful no matter how many times you’ve filed a motion for summary judgment. Since this Webinar covers federal practice generally, rather than any particular federal court, you should carefully review the local rules that govern summary judgment motions, as well as any of the individual judge’s rules concerning the same.

For example, in the Central District of California, where our firm is based, the Court requires a “Separate Statement of Uncontroverted Facts and Conclusions of Law,” where for each claim or cause of action, you must set forth the assertedly undisputed facts that support it, and cite to the evidence. The non-moving party must file a response to that Separate Statement, which in our district is called a “Statement of Genuine Issues in Opposition to Motion for Summary Judgment.”

Our local rules also govern when oppositions and replies must be filed, since Rule 56 itself doesn’t address those issues.

2. What if I, as the non-moving party, don’t have enough evidence to oppose a summary judgment motion?

Answer: Particularly given the relatively short amount allowed by federal courts to oppose a summary judgment motion, what I said previously about planning for summary judgment early in the case would apply to plaintiffs as well. In effect, plaintiff needs to predict to the extent possible, what summary judgment arguments defendant would make, and plan plaintiff’s discovery accordingly. For example, plaintiff needs to be familiar with the elements of all the claims it’s asserting, determine what evidence would support each element, and consider whether that evidence can be obtained from its own witnesses or defendant’s witnesses and third-parties.

FRCP 56(d) provides if the non-moving party can show good reasons for why it cannot present facts essential to oppose the motion, the court can deny or defer the motion, or allow the non-moving party time to obtain such discovery. You would need to show that the sought after evidence is likely to exist; specific reasons for why such evidence could not have obtained earlier; what steps or procedures plaintiff proposes to take to obtain the needed evidence; and an explanation of how the additional discovery will be sufficient to defeat the motion. Ideally, you won’t need to resort to this provision, and the discovery you’ve obtained so far and can quickly access from your own witnesses will be sufficient to present a credible opposition to a summary judgment motion.